Fuel Oil Combustion Handbook PDF
Fuel Oil Combustion Handbook PDF
Fuel Oil Combustion Handbook PDF
Heating fuels are extensively used in industry to provide energy for the
production of steam, hot air for drying and the melting or curing of
products in furnaces. Liquid fuels have many advantages over electrical
or solid fuels, as they are generally more cost effective and require less
capital intensive plant.
This FFS fuels handbook gives explanations and helpful tips in getting
the best out your combustion appliance. There are useful explanations
of the principles and concepts that effect the successful use of liquid
heating fuels. The handling of the fuel from the storage tank to the
burner is an important part of the operation and can be better managed
with a clear understanding of how it should work and where problems
may arise.
With careful selection of the liquid heating fuel that is best suited for
the application, attention to detail in the design of the installation of
the fuel handling system, and efficient and effective operation of the
system, the user should achieve the goal of adding maximum value to
the process.
FUEL SELECTION
There are many different heating fuels available in South Africa, including
several special fuels by FFS Refiners. Heating fuels such as diesel or LO10
are light or thin oils of high quality that require no pre-heating for use.
LSO (low sulphur oil), HFO (heavy furnace oil) or R50:50 are thick, low
cost fuels with some impurities that require heated storage and reticulation
systems. The relative cost of heating fuels is generally dependent on
their quality with regard to the level of impurities and their viscosity.
As far as impurities and viscosity is concerned, this equates to ease of
use. The selection of the heating fuel best suited to the system depends
on the following considerations:
The type of burner used (size, viscosity requirement, ash content
tolerance, turn-down ratio required)
The type of fuel reticulation system installed (heated, unheated)
The environmental sensitivity of the area (sulphur)
The application tolerance to impurities (ash, water)
The relative cost of the heating fuels
The principle of heating fuel selection should be the most economical
fuel suitable for the application. Fuels that require heating to
reduce their viscosity and contain ash that results in additional operational
cleaning costs are usually a lot cheaper than low viscosity low ash easyto-use fuels.
~4~
The Table (1) below lists most of the fuels available and their particular
advantages and disadvantages:
SOURCE
DESCRIPTION
ADVANTAGES
DISADVANTAGES
R50:50
High viscosity
Variable sulphur
High ash
Requires preheating
COAL TAR
Gasification of
coal and coke
producers
Heavy fuel
High viscosity
Medium Ash
High radiant heat
Requires preheating
Requires specialised
firing tube design
for boilers
HFO
(FO 150)
(HFO 180)
Oil refineries
Residual oil
Low cost
Medium to
low ash
content
High viscosity
High sulphur
Requires preheating
LSO
Residual and
recycled oils
Low cost
Low sulphur
High viscosity
Medium ash
Requires preheating
Table - 1
~5~
SOURCE
FFS
DESCRIPTION
ADVANTAGES
DISADVANTAGES
Medium cost
Low ash
Medium sulphur
Low viscosity
Requires no preheating
Low ash
LO10
FFS
Light distillate
derived fuel from
recycled lubrication
oil
Medium cost
Very low sulphur
Medium to high
cost
Power
Parafin
Oil refineries
Low viscosity
High cost
Low sulphur
Oil refineries
Light oil
Low viscosity
Medium sulphur
Table - 1 (cont)
COST OF FUELS
Fuels are usually sold in Rands per ton or Cents per litre and it is not
possible to compare the relative costs without first converting to units
of energy. In order to compare the cost of heating fuels, the fuel price
be converted to cost per Joule. This enables comparisons with gas and
electricity as well. A Joule is the energy value of heating fuels and the
true measure of value for money. In order to convert to a cost per Joule,
the energy value of the fuel and its density must be known.
~6~
Heating fuels also have impurities such as water and ash (non-combustible
materials) which should be deducted from the mass to achieve a more
correct energy value, however the level of impurities are usually small
enough such as to be ignored. The radiance or luminosity of the flame
can also result in better or worse heat value.
Table (2) lists the density and energy values of the common heating fuels
available:
ENERGY VALUES
FUEL
DENSITY
kg/litre
R50/50
44000
0.950
COAL TAR
39000
1.050
HFO
43365
0.985
LSO
44200
0.92
R20/20
45000
0.910
LO10
45500
0.840
Paraffin
46460
0.794
Diesel
46000
0.880
Table - 2
The calculation from Rands per ton to Rands per megaJoule is simply:
R/MJ = (R/ton x 1000) / (kJ/kg)
The calculation from Cents per litre to Rands per megaJoule is as follows:
R/MJ = (10 000 x Cents/litre) / [(kJ/kg) x (kg/litre)]
~7~
~8~
R50/50
SULPHUR CONTENT
(%)
0,6 1,0
0,2 0,5
1,0 - 1,5
COAL TAR
< 0,5
0,25 - 0,3
0,4 - 0,6
HFO
< 0,2
< 0,1
2,2 - 4,0
LSO
0,2 0,3
0,2 0,75
1,0 - 2,0
R20/20
< 0,1
< 0,2
0,5 1,5
LO10
< 0,01
< 0,1
< 0,2
Power Paraffin
< 0,01
< 0,01
< 0,01
Diesel
< 0,01
< 0,025
0,4 - 0,55
Table - 3
~9~
~9~
PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
In order to fully understand the behaviour of liquid heating fuels, an
understanding of some of the physical properties of the liquid is necessary.
The physical properties that most affect combustion are viscosity, pour
point and flash point.
VISCOSITY
The viscosity of a fluid is a measure of its internal resistance to flow.
Viscosity is the opposite of fluidity. All liquid heating fuels decrease in
viscosity with increasing temperature. The importance of viscosity is not
only in its resistance to flow through pipelines (pump selection and pipe
sizing) but more importantly in the burners ability to atomise the fuel
for efficient burning. Viscosity is most commonly expressed in centiStokes
or centipoise. Viscosity is measured in several ways. Some instruments
measure the time for the fluid to flow through a small hole at a
predetermined temperature. The time in seconds can then be converted
to centiStokes from a table, and is then expressed as the viscosity at that
particular temperature.
The viscosity of the fuel is thus very important in determining the correct
temperature that the fuel should be kept at in various parts of the
reticulation system.
Centistokes = Centipoise / Specific Gravity
~ 10 ~
VISCOSITY
(cSt)
ATOMISING
TEMPERATURE
OUTFLOW
TEMPERATURE
R50/50
10 - 20 @ 100C
85C 95C
65C 75C
COAL TAR
12 -18 @ 100C
80C 90C
60C 70C
HFO
20 @ 90C
95C 105C
65C 75C
LSO
16 - 20 @ 90C
85C 95C
65C 75C
R20/20
20 @ 50C
Ambient
Ambient
LO10
4 @ 50C
Ambient
Ambient
1 - 2 @ 25C
Ambient
Ambient
Ambient
Ambient
Power Paraffin
Diesel
Table - 4
POUR POINT
Some fuels have a wax content and become solid or un-pourable below
a critical temperature. Others just become so thick at low temperatures
that they effectively become un-flowable. The significance of this
property is in the design of the fuel reticulation and storage system.
Fuels that have a pour point temperature above the minimum ambient
temperature for the site require a heated reticulation system to ensure
that the fuel is kept liquid and flowable at all times. This includes a tank
out-flow heater, line-heaters, pipeline heat tracing and insulation.
FLASH POINT
The presence of volatile liquids, known as light-ends for their short
carbon chain lengths in the fuels, will produce flammable or explosive
gasses when heated above a certain temperature. The critical temperature
at which this occurs is known as the flash point of the fuel. This property
gives an indication as to the relative hazard that exists in using and
storing this material at a given temperature.
~ 11 ~
TEMPERATURE
(C)
R50/50
> 60C
Coal tar
> 90C
HFO
> 90C
LSO
> 70C
R20/20
> 50C
LO10
> 50C
Power Paraffin
> 45C
Diesel
> 65C
Table - 5
LABORATORY ANALYSES
The quality control of heating fuels requires that the various physical
properties be measured against the standard specifications. This requires
laboratory analyses to be carried out to determine the physical properties
of the fuels. FFS has a laboratory at every factory that routinely carries
out these analyses. FFS ensures that every tanker load of fuel that leaves
the factories is within specification. The following laboratory analyses
are performed:
Ash content (expressed as a percentage mass)
Water content (expressed as a percentage mass)
~ 12 ~
TRANSPORTATION
Industrial heating fuels are usually delivered in bulk by road tanker. All
FFS drivers are HAZCHEM trained and the fuel is transported under
the 3YE hazardous chemical symbol. Bulk delivery requires the user to
have adequate storage facilities to receive a minimum size load and
maintain easy access for large articulated vehicles. The fuel is off-loaded
from the road tanker by means of the users pump via a flexible hose.
Ownership and responsibility of the fuel passes from the supplier to the
user at the coupling of the flexible hose and the road tanker. Although
FFS road tanker drivers will carry out the task of off-loading the fuel,
the responsibility always lies with the user. It is also the users responsibility
to ensure that there is sufficient space in the storage tank to receive the
full load. Customers, when ordering, should allow at least 48 hours for
the delivery of a load of fuel.
RETICULATION SYSTEMS
The design and construction of the fuel reticulation system is critical to
the successful operation of the heating system. By following a few
simple design rules a much improved operability can be achieved and
so ensure a trouble free system.
~ 13 ~
~ 10 ~
BREATHER/DIP
TANK
2,54 DIA. x 6m HIGH
VOLUME 30 cum
25 N.B.
CIRCULATING PUMPS PEDROLLA PK60-1
0,37 kW 380V 2800 ROM
35 l/m @ 10m HEAD
LADDER
P
OFFLOADING PUMP CMD 300
2,2 kW 380V 2850 RPM
48 cum @ 12m HEAD
FILTER
COUPLING
BURNERS
FLOW DIAGRAM
DRAIN
4500
750
FALL TO SUMP
DRAIN VALVE
TANK
1500
BOTTOM MANWAY
LADDER
3000
4500
DRAIN VALVE
150 CONCRETE SLAB
TOP
MANWAY
TANK
750
CIRCULATING
PUMP
PUMPS
SUBJECT
DESCIPTION
DATE
1998/09/3
DRAWN
D.W.S.
SCALE NIL
PLAN
DRAWING No.
L010
REV. 0.
EQUIPMENT
A detailed description of the individual items of equipment used in a
reticulation system is given below.
~ 11 ~
STORAGE TANKS
The sizing of the storage tank facility is very important. A very useful
sizing estimate is to provide at least 10 days of normal consumption.
There are other considerations such as practical size of tank for road
tanker loads, fabrication, available space and cost. Industrial heating
fuel storage tanks are generally vertical mild steel tanks mounted above
ground. The South African Code of Practice (SABS 0131) does not require
users to have the tank or tanks contained in a bunded area. However,
it is prudent for safety and environmental reasons to build bund walls
around tanks to contain accidental spillages. This is occasionally mandated
by local fire departments. Where a spillage may lead to pollution of
adjacent property, a full bund wall is required. Guidelines for the sizing
of bunding around petroleum product storage tanks is given in the
South African Bureau of Standards SABS 089 code of practice. Heating
fuel storage tanks are constructed from mild steel and have two manholes,
one top and one bottom. This allows for easy ventilation and access for
cleaning.
As a certain amount of settlement of solids and sludge will occur in
tanks over time, cleaning should be carried out at regular intervals annually for heavy fuels and every two years for light fuels. Storage
tanks should be founded on a reinforced concrete slab as designed by
a structural engineer. The outsides of tanks require corrosion protection
in the form of a suitable paint system, but the inside of the tank is left
untreated. If the tank has been standing for some time in a corrosive
environment it may require wire brushing before being put into service.
Once in service the fuel will provide the corrosion protection. Standard
size tanks are shown in the table below:
TANK SIZE
(m3)
DIAMETER
(m)
HEIGHT
(m)
23
2,31
5,5
38
2,87
53
2,87
8,4
64
2,87
10
83
2,87
13,2
Table - 4
~ 12 ~
PUMPS
Heavy fuels are best pumped using positive displacement pumps, as they
are able to get the fuel moving when it is cold. A circulation gear pump
running on LSO should give between 7000 10000 hours of service.
Diaphragm pumps have a shorter service life, but are easier and less
expensive to repair.
Light fuels are best pumped with centrifugal or turbine pumps. When
high pressures are required, piston or diaphragm pumps should be used.
Gear pumps are not recommended for use with LO10 as they separate
out the heavy fractions of fuel that then gum up the pump.
3
The unloading pump should have a capacity of 30~50 m /hour. This will
allow the road tankers to offload in between 30-45 minutes.
Mechanical seals can be used to seal the pump drive shaft. Packed gland
seals are adequate if properly maintained and are more economical.
It is very important that pumps have an unrestricted suction flow into
the pump. This greatly reduces the wear on the pump and is the reason
filters should be located after the pump.
PIPE LINES
Pipelines should be sized to ensure a flow rate of 2 3 m/s. This will
ensure that no scaling occurs. Piping should be seamless and suitable
for the pressures used.
LINE HEATERS
Heaters for heavy fuel (>150 cSt @ 50C) installations should be of the
indirect type with a maximum heat release rate of 1,2 Watts/cm2 or 12
kW/m2 . This implies heating elements that are not in direct contact
with the fuel. The reason for this is firstly for safety and secondly to
prevent excessive heat causing the formation of coke particles. Coke
particles may cause blockages of filters and burner nozzles. A typical
size installation will contain one line heater of 9 or 18 kW. This size
heater will contain 3 - 6 elements of 3 kWs each. Should some of these
elements fail, the specific heat input will rise and may result in coking.
Once coking starts there is a reduced flow around the element pocket,
which makes the problem worse. Coke particles blocking the filter will further
reduce the flow rate past the heater, further exacerbating the problem.
~ 13 ~
FILTERS
There are several types of filters available for use as in-line fuel filters.
For heavy fuel oils a wedge wire self cleaning filter is preferred with a
gap width of ~100 microns. This may be hand operated or motorised.
These filters provide more than adequate protection against wear and
blockages. They are also very easy to clean and require very little
maintenance.
For light fuels a bag filter is preferred, which will screen out to ~25
microns. This will provide the very high degree of screening necessary
for extremely demanding applications.
The position of the filter is important and should be placed after the
circulating pumps and the line heater. Filters before the pumps only
serve to increase the back-pressure on the pump causing cavitation and
starvation, which will accelerate wear and lead to early pump failure.
BACK-PRESSURE VALVES
The back-pressure valve or pressure sustaining valve is not a pressure
relief valve. The seat design is different as a pressure sustaining valve is
made for continuous pressure control where as a pressure relief valve
~ 14 ~
VALVES
Valves should be of the cast steel, fire safe, ball or plug valve type,
according to petroleum industry standard. All equipment should have
isolating valves before and after to allow for safe servicing with minimum
spillage. The valves may be of the screwed, flanged or block type. The
main criterion is that the system does not leak.
COMBUSTION
The science of combustion is complex. However, by understanding and
applying a few simple concepts, the efficient and effective use of fuels
is easily achieved.
Simplistically, the fuel, which consists of hydrocarbons (hydrogen and
carbon atoms) is converted to carbon dioxide and water (CO2 + H2O) in
complete combustion and in the process releases energy in the form of
heat.
Combustion can occur when the heating fuel is mixed with an adequate
amount of air containing oxygen. This range of flammable fuel/oxygen
ratios varies between fuels. The theoretically exact ratio is known as
the stoichiometric ratio.
For combustion to be complete and rapid enough, the fuel should have
intimate contact with the oxygen in the air. This is achieved when the
fuel is in sufficiently small enough droplets so as to expose sufficient
surface area to allow combustion to occur in the time available in the
flame area. This is termed atomisation of the fuel. When a fuel is not
properly atomised the droplets will not be completely combusted in the
flame.
~ 15 ~
13
12
11
10
% Carbon Dioxide
9
Percent
Oxygen
4
Carbon Dioxide
3
0
-60
-50
-40
-30
-20
-10
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
% Excess Air
~ 17 ~
FLAME SHAPE
The shape of the flame is important for several reasons. A very long
flame may take the heat past the appliance heat transferring area and
reduce efficiency. A short flame may reduce the residence time of the
fuel mixture in the flame zone and may result in unburned fuel. A wide
flame may impinge on the surface of the firing chamber and will lead
to failure of the refractory or blistering of the firing tube. The best flame
shape is dependent on the type of burner and the shape of the qual
(entry combustion chamber). Flame shape also determines the air fuel
mixing success, which leads to good combustion. An incorrectly set up
flame can also result in pressure oscillations or flame pulsation.
FLAME SPEED
The flame is the zone of combustion within which visible radiation is
produced. A stable flame is merely a flame that is moving towards the
burner at the same speed that the gas mixture is coming out of the
burner. The flame propagation speed is a function of the volatility of
the fuel and the droplet size, and varies between fuels, burners and
appliances. If the gas flow is lower thant the flame propagation speed
then the flame may flash back. If the gas flow is higher than the flame
propagation speed then the flame will be blown away. Varying flame
speeds may result in an unstable flame and pressure oscillation.
STACK LOSSES
The graph below shows the effect of the measured carbon dioxide (CO2) and temperature of the stack waste gas on the stack losses.
For this particular fuel, with a measured CO2 (dry) of 11% and a change
in stack temperature from 220C to 420C, there is a ~10% loss of energy.
If the measured CO2 (dry) was measured at an inefficient 8% and the
stack temperature moved from 220C to 420C then the stack losses
would be ~15%.
~ 18 ~
Stack Losses
16
FUEL OIL
COMPOSITION
Carbon
- 86%
Hydrogen - 12%
Sulphur
- 1,4%
14
12
60
400C
300C
200C
6
20
100C
4
0
25
50
75
100
125
150
175
200
If the CO2 (dry) content of the flue waste gas decreased from 11% to
8% with a stack temperature of 300C, this would result in an energy
loss up the stack of ~8%
A loss of efficiency equates directly to a loss of energy or an increase in
the fuel bill.
ATOMISATION OF FUEL
As mentioned above the atomisation of the fuel is critical to the successful
combustion of the fuel in the flame. Large droplets take longer to
combust and so tend to emerge from the flame as sparklers. These
sparklers tend to form hard deposits of carbonised fuel when they come
into contact with the furnace surfaces. This is undesirable, as there is
a loss of efficiency in the system, the potential for loss of flame shape
and impingement and excessive cleaning required.
Poor atomisation can result from too high viscosity of the fuel (heavy
oils) or lack of fuel pressure. Incorrectly set up burners or worn nozzles
can also result in poor atomisation.
~ 21 ~
TOXIC EMISSIONS
The four main harmful pollutants found in the products of combustion
are nitric oxide (NO), nitrogen dioxide (NO2), carbon monoxide (CO) and
sulfur dioxide (SO2). There are other minor harmful compounds formed
of which many contain sulphur. It is common to talk about NOxs and
SOxs to include all of the possible nitrogen and sulphur products that
occur.
NOxs
Nitrogen oxides are products of combustion formed within locally high
temperature regions where nitrogen and oxygen are present. These
NOx products of combustion emissions pose a significant health hazard
in ambient air. They are also responsible for photochemical smog and
contribute to acid rain. In the lower atmosphere, NO reacts with oxygen
in the air to form NO2 and ozone (O3). Ground level ozone is a health
hazard as it blocks air passages and impairs respiratory performance.
NOx production can be limited by:
Limiting peak flame temperatures
Limiting localised in-flame oxygen concentrations
Reducing residence time at peak temperatures.
~ 20 ~
SOxs
Sulphur dioxide and sulphur trioxide are products of combustion that
will be present when using any fuel containing sulphur or sulphur
compounds. The final production of SOx cannot be altered by the
combustion process.
SOxs are a health hazard as they affect the respiratory system. They are
also of concern as they cause acid rain and general industrial corrosion.
They cause leaching in soils, which can lead to plant growth problems.
Serious corrosion can occur in combustion appliances if condensation
occurs. This occurs easier when sulphur is present as sulphur increases
the dew point temperature of the flue gas. Sulphur compounds, such
as hydrogen sulphide (H2SO3), are offensive for their pungent odour.
PARTICULATE EMISSIONS
Particulate emissions are particles of carbon or soot from incomplete
combustion. Soot is mostly as a result of too rich a mixture (too much
fuel or too little air) or combustion equipment that does not mix properly.
Some fuels have a tendency to smut (emit soot) even at their optimal
fuel/air ratio. Particulate emission is limited by law as it constitutes a
health hazard both to plant and animal (human) life.
WHITE SMOKE
White smoke emissions from the stack may be caused by the following:
Too much excess air (measurable in excess oxygen)
Flame impingement on refractory
From the products melted
From certain types of refractory
BLACK SMOKE
Black smoke emissions from the stack may be caused by the following:
Too little excess air (measurable in excess oxygen)
Poor atomisation (high viscosity, worn nozzles, worn pumps)
Certain HFO's have smutting or sooting properties.
~ 21 ~
CLEANING OF BOILERS/FURNACES
The ash in the fuels will either settle in the firing tubes of boilers, be
caught in dust collectors, enter the product, or emerge as emissions from
the stack. As there are strict environmental restrictions regarding
emissions, it is in everyones interests to prevent ash from going up the
chimney. The cleaning period required to keep your heating appliance
running at peak efficiency will vary from installation to installation and
on the ash content of the fuel. High ash fuels may require cleaning
appliances every second or third week while low ash fuels may require
appliances to be cleaned only every six weeks.
The low cost of heavy furnace oils would normally result in a large energy
cost saving, regardless of the appliance cleaning period.
BURNERS
There are many different propriety brands of burners available, which
fall into four basic burner types.
~ 22 ~
~ 23 ~
PROBLEM SOLVING
In order for the fuel to burn correctly, assuming that the combustion
chamber and quarl shape has been correctly designed and built, in the
most economical manner there are two major criteria that must be met,
namely:
(a)
(b)
The following is a trouble shooting guide that may help solve burning
problems. Although this table cannot cover all types of burners with
their own peculiarities and also the different types of fuels used i.e.
heavy fuels which require heating and light fuels which do not require
heating, it does give the general or typical faults that may be encountered.
(a)
No fuel at the
burner
~ 24 ~
SYMPTOM
Pressure and temperature
gauges at burner do not
register.
CAUSE
(i)
No fuel delivery to
burner
(ii)
Fuel pressure
incorrect
Temperature indicator at
burner reading incorrect
(iii)
Fuel
temp./pressure
incorrect
ACTION TABLE
PROBLEM
(i)
No fuel
delivery to
burner
CAUSE
CORRECTIVE ACTION
Top up fuel
(ii)
Fuel
pressure
incorrect
Reset or repair
Clean filter
(iii) Fuel
temperature
incorrect
Check carbonising,
elements, fuses,
breakers, thermostats,
switches.
Check as for fuel
pressure
~ 25 ~
(b)
SYMPTOM TABLE
PROBLEM
Burner ignition
failure
Incorrect burner
operation
SYMPTOM
CAUSE
(i)
No gas flame
(ii)
No fuel ignition
(iii)
No ignition spark
Black smoke
(iv)
Incorrect burning
(v)
Refractory problems
(vi)
Blocked tubes
White smoke
(vii)
Lean mixture
(ix)
Small flame
(x)
Excessive air
(xi)
Poor atomisation
(xii)
Flame impingement
SYMPTOM TABLE
PROBLEM
(i)
No gas
flame
(Gas ignition
burners)
~ 26 ~
CAUSE
CORRECTIVE ACTION
No gas
Repair/replace
No spark
Check settings
Faulty controller
Repair/replace
Faulty sensor
Repair/replace
SYMPTOM TABLE
PROBLEM
SYMPTON
CAUSE
Power failure
Faulty ignition transformer
Faulty flame sensor
Point settings incorrect
Check
Repair/replace
Repair/replace
Set correctly
(iv) Incorrect
burning
(v)
Rectify
Ash build up
Clean regularly
(ii)
(iii)
No fuel
ignition
No spark
Refractory
Problem
(vi) Blocked
tubes
~ 27 ~
ACTION TABLE
PROBLEM
CAUSE
CORRECTIVE ACTION
Rectify
Check fuel pressure, dirty
nozzles, faulty modulator
Loss of insulation
Faulty circulation fans or
baffles
Repair
Check air circulation
correct
Dirty nozzles
Nozzle too small
Too much excess air
Fuel starvation
Clean nozzles
Fit larger nozzle
Adjust air supply and
check damper
Check fuel supply pressure
and temp, dirty nozzle,
modulator.
(x)
Excessive air
(xi) Poor
atomisation
Replace nozzle
Rectify
Rectify
Clean nozzle and check
for dribbling - diffuser
plate dirty or
incorrectly placed
(xii) Flame
impingement
Poor atomisation
Burner misalignment
Incorrect quarl shape or
condition.
Flame too large (overfiring)
Flame shape
See (xi)
Check and rectify
Rectify
Reduce flame size
Reduce bushy flame
~ 28 ~
CONVERSION TABLE
1 Imperial gallon
I US gallon
= 1016 kg
= 907,2 kg
= 39,964 kJ/m3
= 2,327 kJ/kg
1 lb
= 0,4531 kg
= 47,8924 N/m2
1 lb/in2 (psi)
1 in
= 2,54 cm
1 in2
= 6,452 cm2
1 in3
= 16,39 cm3
1 ft
= 30,48 cm
1 yd
= 91,44 cm
1 mile
= 1,609 km
1 nautical mile
= 1,8532 km
1 barrel
= 0,159 m3
= (9/5)(C) + 32
= (5/9)(C 32)
1 hp
1 kW
= 1,341 hp
1J
= 0,278x10-6 kWh
1 kWh
= 3,6x106 J
1 bar